Month: May 2018

Супрун розповіла, чи можна захворіти від кондиціонера

Переконливих доказів зв’язку між використанням кондиціонерів і погіршенням стану здоров’я немає, заявила в.о. міністра охорони здоров’я України Уляна Супрун у Facebook.

«Щодо негативних симптомів (після використання кондиціонерів – ред.), то найбільш поширені з тих, про які повідомляли учасники досліджень, включали виникнення кашлю, подразнень слизової оболонки, труднощі з диханням, головний біль та втому. Утім, чи це справді пов’язано з кондиціонером? Дослідники так і не знайшли переконливих доказів щодо такого зв’язку», – пише Супрун.

Вона заявила, що ці симптоми пов’язують із так званим синдромом закритих приміщень.

«Якщо ви довго перебуваєте в закритому просторі, це справді може виникати. У такому разі важливо частіше провітрювати приміщення та виходити на подвір’я. Свіже повітря, навіть в спекотну погоду, необхідне для організму. Сам по собі кондиціонер не є чимось небезпечним», – підкреслила Супрун.

Водночас вона зазначила, що дуже важливо користуватися кондиціонером правильно. Супрун радить регулярно доглядати за кондиціонером, уникати різкого перепаду температур та слідкувати за вологістю повітря в приміщенні.

Trump Honors US War Dead on Memorial Day

President Donald Trump paid tribute Monday — Memorial Day in the United States — to generations of the country’s fallen warriors.

“Theirs was a love more deep and more pure than most will ever know,” Trump said at Arlington National Cemetery outside Washington. “They marched into hell so that Americans could know the blessings of peace. They died so that freedom could live.”

He said the pride of family members in their loved ones is “shared by one really and truly grateful nation. Today, our whole country thanks you, embraces you and pledges to you, we will never forget our heroes.”

“To every family member of the fallen, I want you to know that the legacy of those you lost does not fade with time, but grows only more powerful,” he said. “Their legacy does not, like a voice in the distance, become a faint echo, but instead their legacy grows deeper, spreading further, touching more lives, reaching down through time and out across many generations. Through their sacrifice, your loved ones have achieved something very, very special — immortality.”

In Photos: Memorial Day

​The U.S. leader saluted the memory of several of the fallen buried at Arlington as their family members listened to his address, and to two veterans of World War II who attended the ceremony — former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole and 106-year-old Navy veteran Ray Chavez, the oldest U.S. survivor of the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. 

Ahead of his speech, Trump laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the cemetery. Many of the people at the annual commemoration also walked to nearby grave sites to pause and reflect on the lost lives of their loved ones.

Earlier, Trump wished Americans “Happy Memorial Day,” saying “those who died for our great country would be very happy and proud at how well our country is doing today. Best economy in decades, lowest unemployment numbers for Blacks and Hispanics EVER (& women in 18 years), rebuilding our Military and so much more. Nice!” 

Many Americans have the day off from work and school.  The three-day weekend is seen as the unofficial start of the summer vacation season.  Many families have picnics or take trips to beaches, parks or campgrounds. 

Officially, Memorial Day, observed on the last Monday in May, has been set aside to honor all who died during military service throughout U.S. history.  Congress declared Memorial Day a national federal holiday in 1971. Observances around the country and in Washington are planned for the day.

Memorial Day began in 1865, just after the end of the Civil War, when a group of former slaves held what was seen as the first commemoration of the nation’s war dead. 

The group exhumed the bodies of more that 250 Union soldiers from a mass grave at a Confederate prison camp in Charleston, South Carolina, and gave them a proper burial.  

For more than 50 years, the holiday only remembered those killed in the Civil War. It was not until America’s entry into World War I that the tradition was expanded to include those killed in all wars.  

On Sunday, the annual event known as Rolling Thunder, involving thousands of war veterans and others on motorcycles, rolled into Washington, passing the monuments on the National Mall, to honor U.S. soldiers missing in action in foreign wars. Their motorcycles can be heard, long before they are seen. 

According to the website of Rolling Thunder’s Washington chapter, the ride is “an actual demonstration/protest to bring awareness and accountability” to the prisoners of war and soldiers missing in action who have been left behind. 

Rolling Thunder’s motto is: “We will not forget.” 

US Government Won’t Release Details of Settlement With FBI Agent

As they fight allegations that Connecticut FBI agents retaliated against employees for whistleblowing, federal government officials are refusing to release details of a legal settlement with a special agent and asking a judge to throw out another employee’s lawsuit.

Special Agent Kurt Siuzdak’s lawsuit, filed in 2014, exposed allegations of internal strife and dysfunction within the FBI’s main Connecticut office in New Haven. It also disclosed a 2013 visit to the New Haven office by then-Director James Comey, who apologized to employees for “the failure of the FBI’s executive management to correct the leadership failures” in Connecticut.

Siuzdak’s lawsuit was reported settled in court documents filed in March, but the FBI and Justice Department have declined to release the details and rejected recent requests under public records laws by The Associated Press for a copy of the deal. Officials would say only that there was no admission of wrongdoing in the settlement.

Federal officials are now battling another lawsuit by a second New Haven FBI employee, electronics technician Omar Montoya, according to court documents obtained by the AP. Montoya alleges the retaliation against him included his supervisors falsely labeling him an “insider threat” to the FBI, which sparked an investigation, and authorizing unwarranted surveillance of him.

Siuzdak and Montoya have declined to comment on the lawsuits, which were filed in federal court.

Officials at FBI headquarters in Washington and Patricia Ferrick, the special agent in charge of the New Haven office since 2013, also declined to comment on the lawsuits.

Thomas Spina, an assistant U.S. attorney representing the New Haven FBI office, said Justice Department policy prevented him from commenting on pending litigation and releasing details of settlements with employees. In court documents, federal officials denied the allegations in both lawsuits.

“We take the allegations seriously,” Spina said.

Montoya sued the FBI, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and FBI Director Christopher Wray in September. He said Ferrick and other supervisors began a campaign of retaliation against him after he began helping Siuzdak with Siuzdak’s internal complaint against Ferrick and other officials for alleged discrimination and retaliation. Montoya was Siuzdak’s volunteer equal employment opportunity affairs counselor.

Siuzdak, a 21-year FBI veteran, sued the Justice Department on allegations that Ferrick and her predecessor, Kimberly Mertz, blocked his pursuit of several management positions and started baseless internal investigations against him after he reported alleged workplace time and attendance fraud.

Montoya, an Army veteran hired by the FBI in 2010, said the retaliation and harassment against him began shortly after he interviewed Ferrick and Assistant Special Agent in Charge Kevin Kline in April 2015 as part of Siuzdak’s internal complaint, according to his lawsuit.

Montoya also had reported alleged abuse of power in the New Haven office to national FBI officials, which he said upset New Haven FBI leaders.

He said FBI New Haven officials authorized unnecessary surveillance of him, gave him bogus bad performance reviews and threatened to fire him on false allegations of attendance policy violations.

His lawsuit also said officials caused a “fraudulent and frivolous `insider threat’ investigation” to be started against him, by labeling him as someone who posed a “physical, terrorist, intelligence, or other security risk to the FBI.”

He said the stress from the retaliation and harassment caused health problems that made him miss work.

“He was discriminated and/or retaliated against and subjected to a hostile work environment because of his participation in civil rights,” Montoya’s lawsuit says.

In court documents, federal prosecutors denied Montoya’s allegations and asked a judge to dismiss the lawsuit.

Теніс: українка Цуренко перемогла в першому колі Roland-Garros

Українська тенісистка Леся Цуренко перемогла в першому колі турніру Roland-Garros, який відбувається у Франції.

Українка здолала Штефані Фегеле – 4:6, 6:2, 6:2. Гра тривала дві години і одну хвилину.

У наступному раунді Цуренко зустрінеться з 15-ю ракеткою світу Коко Вандевеге зі США.

Інша українка, Катерина Бондаренко, свій поєдинок програла хорватці Донні Векіч – 2:6, 4:6.

Крім Цуренко, у другому колі відкритого чемпіонату Франції з тенісу Україну представлять Еліна Світоліна та Катерина Козлова, яка перемогла чинну чемпіонку, 20-річну Олену Остапенко з Латвії.

Russian Art Gallery to Review Alcohol Sales After Attack on Masterpiece

One of Russia’s leading art galleries announced on Monday it would try to stop the sale of alcohol on its premises after a man attacked a masterpiece with a metal pole after drinking vodka there.

The incident at Moscow’s State Tretyakov Gallery on Friday caused serious damage to one of the country’s most famous paintings, which depicts Tsar Ivan the Terrible cradling his dying son in 1581, and raised awkward questions about how Russia protects its historical and cultural artefacts.

The damaged painting was completed by renowned Russian realist Ilya Repin in 1885 and was described by its curators on Monday as a masterpiece in the same league as the Mona Lisa.

In an interior ministry video, a 37-year-old man called Igor Podporin described how he had knocked back 100 grams of vodka in the gallery’s cafe, became “overwhelmed”, and then used a metal security pole to strike the canvas several times.

Zelfira Tregulova, director of the Tretyakov, said she wanted to stop the sale of alcohol on the gallery’s premises and would be holding talks with the lessees of an on-site cafe and restaurant.

“As we’ve now understood, there were small bottles of wine or cognac in the cafe. We’re going to talk to the cafe and ask them to remove them,” she told a news conference.

It would be harder to persuade a separate restaurant, accessible from both the gallery and the street, to stop selling alcohol, she said.

“The incident was awful and frightening and speaks to the aggression which reigns in society,” said Tregulova, complaining that people were increasingly unable to distinguish between works of art and the documentation of historical facts.

Historical grudge?

Vladimir Aristarkhov, the deputy culture minister, said that jail time for such attacks should be sharply increased from a current three-year maximum, disclosed Russia’s museums had a shortfall of around 1,000 security guards, and called for the attacker to be made an example of.

The Tretyakov’s curator, Tatyana Gorodkova, told reporters that Podporin had shouted something at the time of his attack to the effect that Ivan the Terrible did not kill his son. The painting depicts Ivan cradling his son after dealing him a mortal blow.

Some Russian historians and nationalists dispute the idea that Ivan murdered his son.

The painting, which will be protected by a bulletproof case after being restored, has never been valued because it has never been lent out, but another work by Repin was sold for over $7 million in 2011.

The painting was attacked in 1913, prompting the then gallery’s curator to commit suicide.

When asked if she took responsibility for the latest attack, Tregulova, the gallery’s director, quipped she would not be taking her own life and said the incident had been hard to stop.

“It was not possible to do anything. It was a question of seconds,” she said, saying the gallery nonetheless planned to review security.

 

Poland Says Russian Gas Pipeline Is ‘New Hybrid Weapon’

Poland’s prime minister on Monday called a planned Russian gas pipeline, Nord Stream 2, a “new hybrid weapon” and says Moscow wants to use it to undermine NATO and the European Union. Mateusz Morawiecki called Nord Stream 2 “a poisoned pill of European security” as he addressed a NATO Parliamentary Assembly meeting in Warsaw.

The Nord Stream 2 project would double the amount of natural gas Russia can funnel directly to energy-hungry Germany from newly tapped reserves in Siberia, intentionally skirting Eastern European nations like Poland and Ukraine.

The United States and some other EU members share Poland’s opposition to the project, warning it could give Moscow greater leverage over Western Europe. The debates have created divisions within the EU, for example between Poland and Germany, neighbors and important trade partners.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has suggested that the U.S. opposition to the Nord Stream 2 stems from President Donald Trump’s desire to encourage exports of the U.S. liquefied natural gas, which is supplied by ship and is considerably more expensive than Russian supplies.

Polish President Andrzej Duda also gave his own warning of Russian intentions in Eastern Europe.”With regret it must be said that Moscow has never come to terms with the collapse of the imperial Soviet Union. The invasion of Georgia and the unlawful annexation of Crimea and military intervention in Ukraine illustrate the real intentions of Russia,” Duda said.

He was referring to the Russia-Georgia war of 2008, as well as to Russia’s annexation of the Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and support for pro-Russian rebels in Ukraine’s east, where a war is still ongoing.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told the assembly that a decisive stance is needed toward Russia while leaving open the chance for dialogue.

He said Russia is interfering in democratic processes in other countries, for instance by carrying out cyberattacks.

He also called on Russia to accept responsibility for the downing of the Malaysia Airlines plane over Ukraine in 2014 — an appeal he also made on Friday.

Former President George HW Bush Hospitalized in Maine

Former president George H.W. Bush was hospitalized Sunday in Maine after he experienced low blood pressure and fatigue, a spokesman said.

Just after 2 p.m., Jim McGrath, a spokesman for the 93-year-old Bush, said he was awake, alert and not in any discomfort. He said Bush would spend at least a few days in the hospital for observation.

Bush was taken to Southern Maine Health Care in Biddeford. A spokeswoman said Sunday all information would be released by the Bush family.

Bush arrived in Maine for the summer May 20. Coming about a month after the death of his wife, Barbara, of 73 years, the family said the 41st president was eager to return to the family compound on Walker’s Point. He has visited every summer since childhood, the only exception being the years of his World War II service.

On Saturday, Bush attended a pancake breakfast at an American Legion post in Kennebunkport. He had been scheduled to attend a Memorial Day parade in the town Monday.

Bush, who has a form of Parkinson’s disease and a history of pneumonia and other infections, was hospitalized in Houston on April 22, the day after his wife’s funeral, for an infection. He remained hospitalized for 13 days.

Bush uses a wheelchair and an electric scooter for mobility. He has been hospitalized several times in recent years for respiratory problems.

 

Трамп виставляє передумову перед зустріччю з Мюллером – Джуліані

Адвокат президента США Дональда Трампа Рудольф Джуліані заявив, що президент, перш ніж він ухвалить рішення про розмову зі спеціальним прокурором Робертом Мюллером, хоче дізнатися деталі секретної інформації про розслідування ФБР, що стосується російського втручання в хід виборів, яку отримали законодавці.

Джуліані, виступаючи у неділю на телеканалі Fox News, повідомив, що хоче отримати інформацію про використання урядового інформатора, який контактував зі співробітниками передвиборного штабу Трампа. «Якщо вони не покажуть нам ці документи, нам просто доведеться сказати «ні», – заявив Джуліані.

У серії твітів протягом останніх днів Дональд Трамп звинуватив команду спецпрокурора Роберта Мюллера, яка, за його твердженням, складається з «13 розгніваних демократів», в «конфлікті інтересів» і «полюванні на відьом», і заявив, що єдиною «змовою» під час передвиборної кампанії була «змова» проти самого Трампа, яка нібито існувала між адміністрацією Барака Обами і ФБР.

Адвокат Трампа сказав, що президент хоче провести розмову з Мюллером. При цьому Джуліані зазначив, що він особисто не може рекомендувати цього, якщо така бесіда є «пасткою для висунення звинувачень в наданні неправдивих свідчень під присягою».

У США триває розслідування ймовірного втручання Росії в американські президентські вибори 2016 року. За даними американських спецслужб, за торішніми атаками на сервери Демократичної партії стояло Головне розвідувальне управління Генштабу Збройних сил Росії.

На початку серпня 2017 року спецпрокурор Роберт Мюллер скликав велику колегію присяжних для розслідування «російського сліду» у виборах. Мюллер з’ясовує, чи була змова штабу Дональда Трампа з Кремлем з метою підірвати позиції кандидата в президенти від Демократичної партії Гілларі Клінтон.

Москва втручання у виборчий процес в інших державах категорично відкидає, Трамп називає це розслідування «полюванням на відьом».

Кінофестиваль «Молодість» стартував у Києві

47-й кінофестиваль «Молодість» розпочав свою роботу у неділю, 27 травня. Офіційна церемонія відкриття фестивалю відбулася на Поштовій площі Києва.

Цього року фестиваль уперше проходить на День Києва.

Програма фестивалю, який триватиме до 3 червня, складається з 6 конкурсів: Міжнародний, студентський, короткометражні фільми, національний конкурс та «СОНЯЧНИЙ ЗАЙЧИК»/«SUNNY BUNNY» — фільми на ЛГБТ тематику.

Фільми фестивалю можна буде переглянути в 5 локаціях української столиці – в кінотеатрах «Київ», «Україна», «Сінема-сіті», у «Мистецькому Арсеналі» та просто неба на Поштовій площі іТрухановому острові.

На Поштовій площі у неділю показують фільм-відкриття фестивалю «Обличчя/Рило» Малгожати Шумовської.

На сайті кінфестивалю – особливі слова на адресу українського кінорежисера Олега Сенцова:

«Кіноіндустрія в Україні – це не лише талановиті режисери та проникливі фільми, а й тісний зв’язок між усіма, хто працює в цій сфері мистецтва. Акція на підтримку Олега Сєнцова, яка відбудеться сьогодні в рамках 47-ї «Молодості», це підтверджує. Олег Сєнцов – український кінорежисер, сценарист та письменник, який активно виступав проти анексії Криму. Навесні 2014 року він був заарештований російськими правоохоронними органами за підозрою в тероризмі та засуджений на 20 років. Станом на сьогодні голодування Олега Сєнцова продовжується 14 день», – мовиться на сторінці кінофестивалю у день його відкриття, 27 травня.

Керченська поромна переправа відновила роботу

Керченська поромна переправа знову почала свою роботу після зупинки, повідомляють на сайті ТОВ «Морська дирекція».

За даними перевізника, припинення курсування поромів було викликане посиленням вітру в Керченській протоці. 

Поромна переправа через Керченську протоку – одна з основних транспортних артерій, що з’єднують анексований півострів Крим з Краснодарським краєм Росії.

Російська влада, яка контролює Крим, запустила 16 травня автомобільний рух по мосту через Керченську протоку. Згідно з українським законодавством, в’їзд до Криму через переправу і міст заборонений і кваліфікується як порушення порядку перетину в’їзду на окуповану територію або виїзд із неї.

Trump Lawyer Wary of Prosecutors’ Obstruction Questions in Russia Probe

U.S. President Donald Trump “adamantly’ wants to answer questions in the criminal investigation of his 2016 campaign’s links with Russia, but one of his lawyers says he remains skeptical about allowing Trump to face prosecutors’ queries about whether he obstructed justice by trying to thwart the probe.

Trump lawyer, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, told CNN on Sunday that special counsel Robert Mueller wants to question the president about two key topics: possible collusion with Russia in the months before the election and whether he sought as president to block the investigation by firing FBI director James Comey while he was heading the Russia probe before Mueller was appointed to take over.

“The collusion part we’re pretty comfortable about because there has been none,” Giuliani said. “The obstruction part I’m not as comfortable with. I’m not. The president’s fine with it. He’s innocent. I’m not comfortable because it’s a matter of interpretation, not just hard and fast, true and not true.”

Giuliani added that “if you interpret his comment about firing Comey … if you interpret that as obstructing the investigation, as opposed to removing a guy who’s doing a bad job …. if you see it as obstructing the investigation, then you can say it’s obstruction.”

Giuliani said the president’s legal team is worried that Trump could be trapped into perjury — the criminal offense of lying under oath — in answering prosecutors’ questions about his reasoning for firing Comey. Initially, the White House said Trump ousted Comey because he allegedly mishandled the FBI’s investigation into the use of a private email server by Trump’s 2016 opponent, Democrat Hillary Clinton, while she was the U.S. secretary of state from 2009 to 2013.

Within days, however, Trump told NBC that he was going to fire Comey in any event and was thinking of “this Russia thing” when he ousted him because he thought it was a phony investigation used by Democrats to explain Clinton’s upset loss.

Whatever the misgivings of Trump’s lawyers about letting him face prosecutors’ questions, Giuliani said, “He’s adamantly wanting to do it.”

But Giuliani said that ultimately the decision of whether Trump meets with Mueller’s team depends on “how comfortable we are in them being open-minded” and believing that prosecutors had not decided in advance that Trump was complicit in wrong-doing.

Asked how he was “so sure” there had not been any collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian interests, Giuliani, a one-time prosecutor, said, “Fifty years of investigative experience tells me they don’t have a darn thing.”

Giuliani said that when he was part of the campaign, “No one knew about Russia, nobody talked about Russia.”

Trump has often assailed the investigation and did so again Sunday, calling it a “phony Russia Collusion Wiitch Hunt,” and a “Rigged Investigation!”

Giuliani has said in recent days that ultimately there won’t be any criminal charges brought against Trump, in keeping with long-standing Justice Department guidelines that a sitting president cannot be charged. But Giuliani said, based on what Mueller concludes about Trump’s actions, Congress could eventually face a decision whether to impeach Trump, leading to a Senate trial on whether he should be removed from office.

The Trump lawyer said that any sit-down with Mueller’s prosecutors would not occur until after the still-possible June 12 summit between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore.

 

 

US, North Korean Officials Discuss Preparations for Potential Summit

U.S. officials are meeting with North Korean officials in Panmunjom to discuss a potential summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, the U.S. State Department confirmed on Sunday.

“A U.S. delegation is in ongoing talks with North Korean officials at Panmunjom. We continue to prepare for a meeting between the President and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un,” State Department spokesperson Heather Nauert said in a statement.

Trump announced on Thursday that he was withdrawing from the scheduled June 12 meeting in Singapore, only to say on Friday that the summit might be back on. On Saturday, he said conversations about a potential summit were “going along very well.”

“I think people want to see if we can get the meeting and get something done.  We got that done and we can be successful in the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula, that would be a great thing for North Korea, it would be a great thing for South Korea, it would be great for Japan, it would be great for the world, it would be great for the United States, it would be great for China.  A lot of people are working on it. It’s moving along very nicely,” Trump said.

In North Korea, state media reported Saturday that it’s North Korean leader Kim’s “fixed will” that a summit with Trump in Singapore should go ahead.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in met Saturday with North Korean leader Kim near the two Koreas’ heavily militarized border. 

The leaders exchanged views on how to prepare for the North’s possible summit with Trump, the South Korean presidential office said.

After the meeting, South Korea’s President Moon was upbeat.

“It was like an ordinary encounter between friends,” he said of his Saturday meeting with Kim Jong Un.

​Moon said the North Korean leader remains committed to denuclearization.

“What’s uncertain for Kim is not his intention to denuclearize, but the U.S. stance in hostile relations with North Korea and whether the U.S. can really secure and guarantee his regime,” Moon said.

The two leaders reiterated hopes for a successful North Korea-US summit after Trump abruptly canceled a meeting between the two countries planned for June 12 in Singapore.  Trump cited hostile comments from top North Korean officials as his reason for scrapping the meeting, as well as concern about the country’s commitment to giving up its nuclear weapons.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said Saturday in a statement, “The White House pre-advance team for Singapore will leave as scheduled in order to prepare should the summit take place.”  Politico magazine reported earlier that an advance team of 30 White House and State Department officials were preparing to depart later this weekend.

Kim thanked Moon “for much effort made by him” towards the summit, and said he hoped to improve relations with Washington and “establish mechanism for permanent and durable peace.”

Leaders of North and South Korea also agreed to “meet frequently,” the North’s KCNA agency added.

Steve Herman at the White House contributed to this report.

US Marines’ Bravery Celebrated 100 Years After French Battle

High-ranking military officials from the U.S., France and Germany have taken part in Memorial Day ceremonies at an American cemetery in northern France to mark the centennial of the battle of Belleau Wood, a turning point in World War I and a key moment in Marine Corps history.

 

The ceremony at the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery in the village of Belleau on Sunday included speeches by military officials, including Gen. Robert Neller, commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, prayers, wreath laying, reading of poems and the national anthems of the three countries.

 

A crowd of more than 5,000 attended the event celebrating the fierce and deadly monthlong battle considered as the first major engagement of U.S. troops in the war, especially Marines whose bravery helped the Allied Forces win in Belleau.

 

4 Russian Soldiers Die in Syria

Four Russian servicemen have been killed by “militant fire” in Syria, Russia’s defense ministry said Sunday. 

Five other soldiers were wounded in the incident in Syria’s eastern Deir Ezzor province, according to the ministry, when “several mobile terrorist groups attacked a Syrian government artillery position at night.”   The ministry said the Russian casualties were “military advisors” to the Syrian troops

The statement did not say when the fighting occurred, although several reports suggested it may have taken place last Wednesday.

A monitor for the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told the French News Agency nine Russian soldiers died Wednesday alongside at least 26 Syrian troops near Mayadeen town in Deir Ezzor.

The statement said 43 militants were killed in the resulting clashes.

The Russian statement raised the official count of Russian soldiers killed in Syria to 92.

 

Britain’s May Faces Calls to Relax Northern Ireland Abortion Rules

British Prime Minister Theresa May faced demands from ministers and lawmakers in her Conservative party to reform Northern Ireland’s highly restrictive abortion rules after neighboring Ireland’s vote to liberalize its laws.

Voters in Ireland, a once deeply Catholic nation, backed the change by two-to-one, a far higher margin than any opinion poll in the run up to the vote had predicted.

Penny Mordaunt, Britain’s women and equalities minister, said that the victory to legalize abortion should now bring change north of the Irish border.

“A historic and great day for Ireland and a hopeful one for Northern Ireland,” Mordaunt said. “That hope must be met.”

Northern Ireland has some of the most restrictive abortion laws in Europe with even rape and fatal foetal abnormality not considered legal grounds for a termination.

And unlike other parts of the United Kingdom, abortions are banned apart from when the life or mental health of the mother is in danger.

Since the collapse of a power sharing administration in Northern Ireland at the beginning of last year, British officials have been taking major decisions in the region.

But any moves to change the law could destabilize the British government by antagonizing the socially conservative Democratic Unionist Party, which May depends on for her parliamentary majority.

More than 130 members of Britain’s parliament, including lawmakers in the ruling Conservative party, are prepared to back an amendment to a new domestic violence bill to allow abortions in Northern Ireland, the Sunday Times newspaper reported.

Anne Milton, an education minister, on Sunday urged the prime minister to allow a free vote in parliament.

Sarah Wollaston, the chair of the health select committee and a lawmaker in May’s party, said she would support the proposed amendment and said Northern Ireland should at least be given a vote to decide.

A spokeswoman for May said changing the rules on abortion is a decision that should be taken by a devolved assembly and the government is working to revive the power-sharing agreement.

Northern Ireland’s elected assembly has the right to bring its abortion laws in line with the rest of Britain, but voted against doing so in February 2016 and the assembly has not sat since the devolved government collapsed in January 2017.

На фінал Ліги чемпіонів прилетіло понад 20 тисяч вболівальників – Слободян

До Києва літаками прибуло вже понад 20,2 тисячі вболівальників, які прибули на фінал Ліги чемпіонів УЄФА 2018 року в Києві. Про це повідомляє речник Державної прикордонної служби Олег Слободян.

«Окрім цього, в аеропорту «Бориспіль» застосовано групу реагування щодо громадянина Ірану (назвався терористом), виявлено та відмовлено в пропуску двом російським журналістам. В аеропорту «Жуляни» виявлено та заборонено в’їзд в Україну одному із лідерів ізраїльського кримінального угрупування», – написав він на своїй сторінці у Facebook.

Читайте також: Прикордонники розмалювали обличчя у кольори «Ліверпуля» та «Реала», зустрічаючи футболістів

25 травня Слободян говорив, що впродовж 25 і 26 травня очікується прибуття приблизно 30 тисяч фанів до столичних аеропортів.

Читайте також: Ліга чемпіонів в Києві: поліція заявляє про 26 правопорушень із участю іноземців

Фінал Ліги чемпіонів між іспанським «Реал Мадридом» та англійським «Ліверпулем» відбудеться 26 травня на НСК «Олімпійський» у Києві. Початок – о 21:30.

Читайте також: Де і коли дивитися фінал Ліги чемпіонів

Для «Реала» це буде четвертий фінал цього турніру за останні п’ять сезонів: мадридці перемагали в Лізі чемпіонів у 2014, 2016 та 2017 роках. Загалом іспанська команда вигравала трофей 12 разів.

«Ліверпуль» востаннє грав у фіналі найпрестижнішого європейського клубного турніру у 2007 році. Тоді англійці програли італійському «Мілану». На рахунку «Ліверпуля» п’ять перемог у Лізі чемпіонів та Кубку європейських чемпіонів (так турнір називався до 1992 року). Одну з них «червоні» здобули, здолавши у фінальному матчі «Реал». Це сталося у 1981 році.

В анексованому Криму знову відмовилися відкрити справу за фактом загибелі Веджіє Кашка – Полозов

Управління Слідчого комітету Росії в анексованому нею українському Криму повторно відмовилося відкрити кримінальне провадження за фактом загибелі ветерана кримськотатарського національного руху Веджіє Кашка. Про це повідомив російський адвокат Микола Полозов у Facebook.

 

Адвокат зазначив, що в лютому 2018 року підконтрольне Росії слідство відмовлялося порушувати кримінальну справу за фактом смерті Кашка на підставі відсутності обставин, передбачених частиною 1 статті 105 (вбивство), частиною 1 статті 109 (спричинення смерті з необережності), частиною 4 статті 111 (навмисне заподіяння тяжкої шкоди здоров’ю, що призвело з необережності до смерті потерпілого) Кримінального кодексу Росії.

«Слідчий вказав як підставу своєї відмови в порушенні цих кримінальних справ природні причини смерті Веджіє Кашка, засновуючи свій висновок на результатах судово-медичної експертизи. Після моєї заяви про ознайомлення з матеріалами перевірки, в тому числі з результатами судмедекспертизи, постанова була скасована, а перевірка відновилася», – повідомив адвокат.

Полозов зазначив, що під час перевірки провели кілька експертиз, після чого слідчий виніс нову постанову про відмову в порушенні кримінальної справи. Також слідство не порушило кримінальної справи стосовно лікаря швидкої медичної допомоги за статтею «заподіяння смерті з необережності внаслідок неналежного виконання особою своїх професійних обов’язків».

«Для подальшого розслідування обставин загибелі Кашка необхідно детально, із залученням фахівців, вивчити всі проведені судово-медичні експертизи й інші документи, зібрані слідством у матеріалі перевірки. Однак із лютого цей матеріал недоступний. До травня він перебував у дослідчому провадженні слідчого за відновленою перевіркою й уже майже місяць перебуває в російській прокуратурі у Криму», – написав Полозов.

Він додав, що подав слідчому повторну заяву про ознайомлення з матеріалом перевірки.

«Незалежно від процесуальних і бюрократичних маніпуляцій, що затягують процес розслідування справи Кашка, здійснюваних російською адміністрацією, воно триватиме до вичерпного встановлення всіх обставин», – підкреслив адвокат.

На початку лютого Полозов розпочав незалежне розслідування загибелі Веджіє Кашка в Криму 2017 року. За його словами, смерть Кашка – «наслідок надмірного й непропорційного застосування до неї сили з боку тих російських силовиків, які здійснювали її незаконне затримання».

У Сімферополі 23 листопада 2017 року російські силовики затримали групу кримських татар – Кязіма Аметова, Асана Чапуха, Руслана Трубача і Бекіра Дегерменджі. Їх звинувачують у вимаганні у громадянина Туреччини. При затриманні цих людей російськими силовиками стало зле ветерану кримськотатарського національного руху Веджіє Кашка. Пізніше стало відомо, що жінка померла.

23 листопада президент України Петро Порошенко засудив затримання активістів російськими силовиками в анексованому Криму, під час яких померла ветеран кримськотатарського національного руху Веджіє Кашка, та заявив: «Ми не збираємося з цим миритися. Росія має нести відповідальність за ці жахливі кроки. Хочу наголосити, що єдина форма захисту кримськотатарського народу – це звільнення Криму від російських окупантів»

Прокуратура АРК, що базується на материковій частині України, відкрила кримінальні провадження за фактами проведення незаконних обшуків, затримань і смерті ветерана кримськотатарського національного руху Веджіє Кашка.

Веджіє Кашка – ветеран кримськотатарського національного руху. Вона народилася 1934 року в селі Ускут (нині Привітне), неподалік від Алушти. Після депортації кримськотатарського народу 1944 року Веджіє Кашка проживала з сім’єю в Узбекистані. У 1950-і роки разом зі своїм чоловіком Бекіром жінка приєдналася до національного руху кримських татар.

На «Каланчаку» затримали кримчанку, яку розшукували за дезертирство – ДПСУ

26 травня українські прикордонники затримали на адмінкордоні з Кримом жительку півострова, яка перебуває в розшуку за дезертирство. Про це повідомляє прес-служба Азово-Чорноморського регіонального управління Держприкордонслужби України.

За інформацією відомства, 39-річну жінку затримали вночі на контрольному пункті в’їзду-виїзду «Каланчак», коли вона прямувала з Криму на материкову частину України.

«Під час перевірки документів прикордонники встановили, що, відповідно до бази даних, громадянка розшукується правоохоронними органами України за вчинення злочину, передбаченого частиною 1 статті 408 (дезертирство)», – йдеться в повідомленні.

Як стверджують прикордонники, затримана проходила службу у військовій частині Збройних сил України на території Криму, «але після російської анексії півострова не прибула до своєї частини, яка була переміщена на материк».

Прикордонники передали її Національній поліції України. Ім’я кримчанки не розголошується. Її позиція щодо затримання на цей момент невідома.

Після анексії Криму Росією на початку 2014 року між материковою Україною й півостровом діють три пункти пропуску в Херсонській області: «Чонгар», «Каланчак» і «Чаплинка».

Із боку Криму теж обладнані три пункти пропуску: «Перекоп», «Джанкой» і «Армянськ». Вони контролюються російськими прикордонниками і спецслужбами.

Thousands Across France Protest Macron’s ‘Brutal’ Policies

Thousands of protesters marched under tight security in eastern Paris on Saturday after French labor unions, left-wing political parties and civil rights groups called for “floods of people” to oppose the economic policies of President Emmanuel Macron.

Marches and rallies also were being held in dozens of other French cities as part of the joint action against Macron’s policies that organizers consider pro-business and “brutal.”

At the Paris event, Philippe Martinez, head of leading French union CGT, advised the president to “look out the window of his palace to see real life.”

More than 1,500 police officers were mobilized in the French capital to prevent activists not associated with the official protest from disrupting the march and causing damage, which has happened during previous recent demonstrations.

Police said they detained 35 people in Paris before and after the march started. Some of them were preemptively taken in for questioning after officers searched their bags and found “equipment” that could be used to cause damage or to hide their faces.

Others, mainly youths dressed in black with their faces covered, were detained on the sidelines of the main protest for breaking a window at a business or damaging bus shelters. Police used tear gas canisters to push them back. One officer was slightly injured by thrown debris.

Unions, opposition parties and other groups are particularly denouncing a Macron-led legal overhaul aimed at cutting worker protections and increasing police powers.

They allege that Macron supports tax reform that favors France’s wealthiest and is working to tear down public services, including by making it harder for students to attend the universities of their choice and easier for police to brutalize residents of disadvantaged neighborhoods.

In the southern port city of Marseille, Jean-Luc Melenchon, leader of the far-left Defiant France party, also addressed Macron while speaking to demonstrators.

“In the name of the poor, the humiliated, the homeless and the jobless, we are telling you, `Enough, enough of this world,”‘ Melenchon said.

Macron, a centrist former investment banker, says his economic changes are meant to increase France’s global competitiveness. In an interview with BFM TV on Friday, the French leader said that those who protest will not manage to “block the country.”

“No disorder will stop me, and calm will return,” Macron said.

Jailed British-Iranian Aid Worker To Face Trial On Security Charges

A detained British-Iranian aid worker sentenced to five years in jail in Iran is to face a second trial on new security charges, the semi-official Tasnim news agency on Saturday quoted Tehran Revolutionary Court’s head Musa Ghazanfarabadi as saying.

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a project manager with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, was arrested in April 2016 at a Tehran airport as she was heading back to Britain with her two-year-old daughter after a family visit.

She was convicted of plotting to overthrow Iran’s clerical establishment, a charge denied by her family and the Foundation, a charity organization that is independent of Thomson Reuters and operates independently of Reuters News.

British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson discussed Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s case with Iranian officials after flying to Tehran in December to try to seek her release.

“Ghazanfarabadi said the charge against Zaghari in the new case is security-related but did not say whether it was espionage or another charge,” Tasnim reported.

“Zaghari is to present an attorney and then the court will convene,” Ghazanfarabadi said.

Reuters was unable to determine the identity of the lawyer.

Asked for comment by Reuters, Britain’s Foreign Office said on Saturday that it would not provide a commentary on “every twist and turn.”

Her husband Richard Ratcliffe said it was not clear what the latest charges involved.

“To go back a week, she had met with the judge … who said there would be a charge of spreading propaganda against the regime, that’s a very mild form of security charge so hopefully it’s just that,” he told BBC TV.

In a statement on Monday, the Thomson Reuters Foundation said it totally rejected “the renewed accusations that Nazanin is guilty of spreading propaganda” and said it continued to assert her full innocence.

In response to an urgent question in parliament on Tuesday about her situation, British Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt said Prime Minister Theresa May had raised all consular cases with President Hassan Rouhani in a call earlier this month. He did not provide further details.

He also said the British ambassador in Tehran had spoken to Zaghari-Ratcliffe last Sunday.

“We remain of the assessment that a private, rather than public approach is most likely to result in progress in Nazanin’s case and ultimately, her release, which is all any of us want,” he said.

Iran does not recognize dual citizenship, which limits the access foreign embassies have to their dual citizens held there.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have arrested at least 30 dual nationals during the past two years, mostly on spying charges, according to lawyers, diplomats and relatives, Reuters reported in November.

According to former prisoners, families of current ones and diplomats, in some cases the detainees are kept to be used for a prisoner exchange with Western countries. Iran denies the accusation.

Senator, Trump Say Utah Man Released From Venezuela Jail

President Donald Trump said U.S. citizen Josh Holt was released from a Venezuelan jail Saturday after being detained for two years without a trial. 

“Should be landing in D.C. this evening and be in the White House, with his family, at about 7:00 P.M.,” the president wrote on Twitter. “The great people of Utah will be very happy!”

Senator Orrin Hatch, who represents Holt’s home state of Utah, posted on Twitter he helped secure the release of Holt and his wife, Thamy.

“Over the last two years I’ve worked with two Presidential administrations, countless diplomatic contacts, ambassadors from all over the world, a network of contacts in Venezuela, and President Maduro himself, and I could not be more honored to be able to reunite Josh with his sweet, long-suffering family …”

Hatch also thanked U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker, who met in the Venezuelan capital of Caracas Friday with President Nicolas Maduro in an attempt to secure the release of Holt. Holt has been in a Caracas jail without a trial for two years on what he has said are false weapons charges.

The 26-year-old Holt traveled to Venezuela in June 2016 to marry a woman he met online. Police arrested Holt after finding an assault rifle and grenades during a raid on a housing complex where the couple lived. Holt has denied the charges.

After Corker’s meeting with Maduro, there was speculation on social media platforms in Venezuela that the couple would be released as a goodwill gesture to improve U.S.-Venezuelan relations. 

Maduro won a second six-year term in office Sunday in an election that the U.S. and other countries have described as a “sham” after several rivals were prohibited from running. 

After his victory, Maduro expelled the two most senior U.S. diplomats for allegedly conspiring to sabotage the election by pushing opposition parties to boycott the election.

Despite the expulsion of the American diplomats, the Venezuelan government has been seeking ways to avoid the threat of harsh U.S. oil sanctions that could further cripple the country’s ailing economy. 

 

Ireland Ends Abortion Ban as "Quiet Revolution" Transforms Country

Ireland has voted by a landslide to liberalize its highly restrictive abortion laws in a referendum that its prime minister called the culmination of a “quiet revolution” in what was one of Europe’s most socially conservative countries.

Voters in the once deeply Catholic nation backed the change by two-to-one, a far higher margin than any opinion poll in the run up to the vote had predicted, and allows the government to bring in legislation by the end of the year.

“It’s incredible. For all the years and years and years we’ve been trying to look after women and not been able to look after women, this means everything,” said Mary Higgins, obstetrician and Together For Yes campaigner.

Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, who campaigned to repeal the laws, had called the vote a once-in-a-generation chance and voters responded by turning out in droves. A turnout of 64 percent was one of the highest for a referendum.

All but one of Ireland’s 40 constituencies voted “Yes” and contributed to the 66 percent that carried the proposal, almost an exact reversal of the 1983 referendum result that inserted the ban into the constitution.

“What we see is the culmination of a quiet revolution that has been taking place in Ireland over the last couple of decades,” Varadkar, who became Ireland’s first openly gay prime minister last year, told journalists in Dublin.

The outcome is the latest milestone on a path of change for a country which only legalized divorce by a razor thin majority in 1995 before becoming the first in the world to adopt gay marriage by popular vote three years ago.

“For him (his son), it’s a different Ireland that we’re moving onto. It’s an Ireland that is more tolerant, more inclusive and where he can be whatever he wants without fear of recrimination,” said Colm O’Riain, a 44-year-old teacher with his son Ruarai, who was born 14 weeks premature in November.

Astonishing margin

Anti-abortion activists conceded defeat early on Saturday as their opponents expressed astonishment at the scale of their victory. Lawmakers who campaigned for a “No” vote said they would not seek to block the government’s legislation.

“What Irish voters did yesterday is a tragedy of historic proportions,” the Save The 8th group said. “However, a wrong does not become a right simply because a majority support it.”

Voters were asked to scrap the constitutional amendment, which gives an unborn child and its mother equal rights to life.

The consequent prohibition on abortion was partly lifted in 2013 for cases where the mother’s life was in danger.

The largest newspaper, the Irish Independent described the result as “a massive moment in Ireland’s social history”.

Campaigners for change, wearing “Repeal” jumpers and “Yes” badges, gathered at count centers, many in tears and hugging each other. Others sang songs in the sunshine outside the main Dublin results center as they awaited the official result.

The large crowd cheered Varadkar as he took to the stage to thank them for “trusting women and respecting their choices”.

“Yes” campaigners had argued that with over 3,000 women travelling to Britain each year for terminations – a right enshrined in a 1992 referendum – and others ordering pills illegally online, abortion was already a reality in Ireland.

Reform in Ireland also raised the prospect that women in Northern Ireland, where abortion is still illegal, may start travelling south of the border.

The leaders of Sinn Fein, the province’s largest Irish nationalist party that also has a large presence in the Irish republic, held up a sign on stage saying “The North is next.”

Middle ground

No social issue has divided Ireland’s 4.8 million people as sharply as abortion, which was pushed up the political agenda by the death in 2012 of a 31-year-old Indian immigrant from a septic miscarriage after she was refused a termination.

Campaigners left flowers and candles at a large mural of the woman, Savita Halappanavar, in central Dublin. Her parents in India were quoted by the Irish Times newspaper as thanking their “brothers and sisters” in Ireland and requesting the new law be called “Savita’s law”.

Deputy Prime Minister Simon Coveney said he believed a middle ground of around 40 percent of voters had decided en masse to allow women and doctors rather than lawmakers and lawyers to decide whether a termination was justified.

The vote divided political parties, saw the once-mighty Catholic Church take a back seat, with the campaign defined by women on both sides publicly describing their personal experiences of terminations.

Although not on the ballot paper, the “No” camp sought to seize on government plans to allow abortions with no restriction up to 12 weeks into a pregnancy if the referendum is carried, calling it a step too far for most voters.

Save The 8th spokesman McGuirk appealed for tolerance and respect from “those who find themselves in the majority now”.

Jim Wells, a member of Northern Ireland’s socially conservative Democratic Unionist Party, said that after the vote Northern Ireland and Malta were the only parts of Europe where the unborn child was properly protected.

“It is inevitable that the abortion industry based in Great Britain will set up clinics in border towns,” he said. “The outcome of the referendum is an extremely worrying development for the protection of the unborn child in Northern Ireland.”

Fire Fears Force Land Closures in Arizona

Dry pine needles and dead wood snapped under fire prevention officer Matt Engbring’s boots as he hiked a half-mile into the woods in search of a makeshift campsite that had served as one man’s home until this week when the area was closed because of the escalating threat of massive wildfires.

Engbring walked past small ravines where wind quickly could carry embers and by the charred remains of a campfire, finally reaching the spot where John Dobson had been living among ponderosa pines in Arizona’s Coconino National Forest.

He spotted Dobson earlier as he was leaving the forest with his bicycle and issued a warning that he’ll likely repeat over the busy Memorial Day weekend as tourists flock to Arizona’s cooler mountainous areas to hike, bike, camp and fish.

“The area is closed now, and I can’t allow you to go back in,” he said.

​Conditions ripe for wildfire

Many parts of the West are dealing with drought, but nowhere else has more state and federal land been closed to recreation than in Arizona where conditions are ripe for large-scale wildfires. Portions of the Apache-Sitgreaves, Coconino, Kaibab and Tonto national forests are closed because the dry vegetation quickly can go up in flames, firefighters would have a hard time stopping it, and homes and water resources are at risk.

In neighboring New Mexico, fire restrictions are in place, but no forests have closed. Forest officials in the western part of that state have suspended woodcutting permits, including ceremonial wood gathering by Native American tribes. They’ve also warned the public to look out for hungry bears.

Forests in southern Colorado and southern Utah are open, but officials are limiting campfires to developed areas.

“A lot of our rural, small communities depend on recreation and access to public land, so it’s on the table but really an option of last resort,” said Holly Krake, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Forest Service region that includes Colorado.

Hot, dry, breezy forecast

Weather over the next six weeks is expected to be in line with the typical onset of fire season: increasingly hot, breezy and dry. Then the monsoonal system that carries heavy rain should kick in.

“The bottom line is it’s going to get worse before it gets better,” said Rich Naden, fire weather meteorologist with the Southwest Coordination Center. “But this time of year is always like that. It’s almost like clockwork.”

Rare closures

Widespread forest closures in Arizona are rare. The 1.8 million-acre Coconino National Forest shut down completely because of fire danger in 2006 for nine days. A 2002 shutdown lasted nine weeks, encompassing the Memorial Day and July 4 holidays. Other national forests had closures in 2002 as well.

The current closures are affecting a small percentage of national forests in Arizona, and the general guidance for tourists is to check ahead of time to see what’s open and whether campfires are allowed.

In Flagstaff, Los Angeles residents Pauline and John Barba had hoped to barbecue this week while staying at a commercial campground, but charcoal grills were wrapped in yellow caution tape.

Nearby, a bright yellow sign on the barbed wire fence warned that no one is allowed in the forest.

“We love the outdoors and the pine trees and everything,” she said. “It’s just a shame people are destructive and not careful.”

Economic hit

Beyond inconveniencing campers and hikers, the drought’s effects and forest closures are being felt by ranchers who can’t graze cattle in the forest and researchers who can’t conduct studies. Forest thinning projects also are delayed.

At a ski resort outside of Flagstaff, 50 people are out of work, and hundreds of tickets for pre-booked activities have been canceled. The Arizona Snowbowl, which operates under a special permit in a closed forest area, had hoped to run its scenic chair lift and debut family activities this weekend.

Those who left camping trailers in now-closed areas of the Coconino National Forest to stake out a spot for the busy holiday weekend will have to call forest officials to unlock the gate to let them out. Others have tried avoiding officials patrolling the forest or sneaking in when no one is looking.

The biggest fear is that a campfire sparks a wildfire. The Coconino National Forest recorded 700 abandoned campfires last year, and 121 built illegally during fire restrictions, setting a record. Target shooting, drones, cigarettes and sparks from vehicle exhausts also are concerns.

Fearing Contamination, Idaho Town Told Not to Drink Water

Residents of an Idaho town have been told not to drink its well water amid concerns that a fired municipal worker who killed himself in his home may have contaminated it, officials said Friday.

Tom Young, 62, was found dead Thursday by emergency workers who were sent to a hospital after entering his residence in Dietrich.

Lincoln County Sheriff Rene Rodriguez said Friday that Young’s death has been ruled a suicide and the cause is asphyxiation by nitrogen gas released into the home from a tank.

The gas is also blamed for sickening seven emergency workers, including Rodriguez, who was among those transported to hospitals. One other person was taken to a hospital. All were later released.

“For a couple of our guys it was sudden onset, and for me and a couple others it was delayed reaction,” said Rodriguez, noting he was still experiencing headaches.

Fired from city job

Young was fired May 9 from his city post following an altercation at City Hall that involved police, Dietrich Mayor Don Heiken said, declining to elaborate on the incident.

Court records say Young had been charged with felony robbery and misdemeanor counts of battery and intentional destruction of property. He pleaded not guilty and posted a $600 bond.

“When I talked to him after this altercation at City Hall, he said, ‘Well, I guess I don’t have a job,’” Heiken said. “And I said, ‘No you don’t.’ And that’s kind of how that happened.”

Heiken said there’s concern Young contaminated the well that serves the community of 300 people. However, he noted that it was unclear if Young would have had access to city property because he turned in his keys the day he was fired.

Tests clean so far

Mike Brown of the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality said Friday that the first set of water tests found no contamination, the Idaho Statesman reported.

“We surveyed the system and saw nothing out of the ordinary and no evidence of tampering,” he said earlier in the day.

He said Young had a large amount of fertilizer in his home and the tests will determine if there is fertilizer or other substances in the water used by residents.

Brown said nitrogen by itself wouldn’t harm the city’s drinking water.

Results of the other tests are expected Saturday.

Young had been scheduled to appear in court on the day he was found dead.

Фанати у Києві: 84-річні вболівальники, англійські пісні та мадридська витримка

Їх не зупиняє відстань і вік. Вони готові вболівати будь-де та будь-коли

Справа про подорожчання скрапленого газу у серпні 2017 року: АМКУ близький до схвалення рішення

В Антимонопольному комітеті 24 травня відбулося перше стосовно схвалення рішення у справі, розпочатій у вересні 2017 року щодо ознак антиконкурентних дій на ринку скрапленого газу. 

Як повідомляє прес-служба АМКУ, відповідачами у справі є суб’єкти господарювання – група «Надежда», група «WOG», група «ОККО», ТОВ «Авантаж 7» і «Факторінг Груп».

В антимонопольному комітеті вважають, що узгоджені дії цих суб’єктів господарювання полягали у «схожому підвищенні цін на скраплений газ» під час його реалізації у роздріб у серпні 2017 року, при цьому аналіз ситуації на ринку вказує на відсутність об’єктивних причин для таких дій. 

У АМКУ зазначають, що відповідачам запропонували запропоновано «ці узгоджені дії» порушенням законодавства про захист економічної конкуренції, проте відповідачі мали зауваження. 

У результаті відповідачам запропонували до 6 червня надати додаткову інформацію, додають в комітеті. 

Влітку минулого року в Україні подорожчав скраплений газ. Антимонопольний комітет почав розслідування. 

Читайте також – Дорогий автогаз: Гройсман заявив про диверсію. Винна Росія і Медведчук?

У Мінекономрозвитку тоді пояснювали, що українські виробники скрапленого газу – «Укргазвидобування», «Укрнафта», «Укртатнафта» і приватні компанії – покривають не більше ніж 20% потреб ринку, а решту Україна імпортує з Росії, Білорусі, Казахстану, а обмеження з боку Росії призвели до зменшення імпорту скрапленого газу в Україну і його дефіциту, що вплинуло на ціну.

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